She Tore Up His $250,000 Check. Years Later, His Mother Begged.-kieutrinh

The first thing Ava Monroe saw when the lawyer opened his briefcase was not the contract.

It was the baby-sized white sock tucked into the side pocket of her purse.

She had bought it that morning at a drugstore near campus because some foolish, desperate part of her still believed Nathan Whitlock might smile when she told him he was going to be a father.

Image

The sock was soft, white, and absurdly small.

Now Ava sat in a private room at the Hawthorne Club in Boston, where the furniture looked older than most families and the air smelled like leather, polish, and money that had never had to apologize for itself.

Rain tapped against the windows.

Somewhere outside the closed door, glasses chimed and people laughed in voices that did not know what was happening inside.

Across the mahogany table, a silver-haired attorney slid a check toward her.

‘Mr. Whitlock’s family believes this amount should help you make a reasonable decision,’ he said.

Ava looked down.

Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

The number sat there like an insult wearing a clean suit.

‘A reasonable decision,’ she repeated.

The lawyer folded his hands.

‘This situation does not need to become destructive.’

‘My baby is not a situation.’

Nathan stood by the window with his back to her, one hand pressed against his mouth.

He was twenty-three, beautiful in the polished way rich sons are beautiful, wearing a navy suit that probably cost more than her father’s truck.

Three months earlier, he had told Ava she was the only person who made him feel human.

Now he could not even look at her.

‘Nathan,’ Ava said.

His shoulders tightened.

‘Look at me.’

Slowly, he turned.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *